MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter comes before the Court on motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) filed by all defendants. The matter has been fully briefed and is ripe for decision.
I. Factual & Procedural Background
In its Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”), plaintiff City of Cleveland (the “City” or “Plaintiff’) asserts a single public nuisance cause of action against each of the following corporate defendants: Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc., Bank of America, N.A., Bear Stearns & Co.,, Inc., Citibank, N.A., Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., Countrywide Securities Corporation, Credit Suisse First Boston LLC, Credit Suisse (USA), Inc., Deutsche Bank Securi *516 ties, Inc., GMAC-RFC Holding Company, Goldman Sachs & Co., Greenwich Capital Markets, Inc., HSBC Securities (USA), Inc., JP Morgan Acquisition Corp., Chase Bank USA, N.A.,, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc., Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., Novastar Mortgage, Inc., Option One Mortgage Corporation, Washington Mutual Bank, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., and Wells Fargo Asset Securities Corporation (collectively, “Defendants”).
Plaintiff blames subprime lending for the epidemic of foreclosures afflicting the City. Plaintiff claims that subprime lending was categorically inappropriate for Cleveland due to its “unique” economic situation, characterized by a high poverty rate, sluggish economy, limited employment opportunities, and stable but not booming property values. The SAC targets Defendants not for engaging in direct subprime lending, but instead for their alleged role in securitizing subprime loans into mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”). This allegation appears calculated to capture the related activities of (1) creating MBS by bundling together subprime loans and/or (2) providing the funding used to purchase the underlying loans. Plaintiff asserts that this conduct created a public nuisance, with the resulting spike in foreclosure activity being its foreseeable result. The City seeks to recover damages it claims are represented by (1) the cost of monitoring, maintaining, and demolishing foreclosed properties; and (2) the diminution in the City’s property tax revenues caused by the depreciating effect foreclosures have had on the affected homes and surrounding properties.
Via eight separate motions to dismiss— some filed individually and others in combination — Defendants move to dismiss the SAC under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim for relief. 1 Individual defendants and groups of defendants present numerous arguments in support of dismissal, some of which apply only to certain defendants. 2 All Defendants, however, assert that the City’s public nuisance claim fails because (a) it is preempted by Ohio law; (b) it is barred by the economic loss doctrine; (c) Plaintiff has not alleged interference with a public right; (d) Defendants’ conduct did not constitute an unreasonable interference with a public right; and (e) the allegations in the SAC are insufficient to demonstrate proximate cause. The City filed a combined response in opposition to the motions to dismiss, and Defendants filed replies. In this memorandum, the Court addresses four of the aforementioned universally-applicable arguments raised by Defendants and, finding each of the four selected arguments inde *517 pendently sufficient to sustain the disposition of the case, declines to address Defendants’ remaining contentions. 3
II. Law & Analysis
A. Standard of Review
When reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the court must construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, accept all well-pleaded factual allegations as true, and determine whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Commercial Money Ctr., Inc. v. Ill. Union Ins. Co.,
B. Choice of Law
This case is before the Court on diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, so the choice of law rules of the forum state apply.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
C.State Law Preemption
Defendants argue that the City’s complaint is preempted by Ohio state law, specifically, Ohio Revised Code § 1.63, which states:
The state solely shall regulate the business of originating, granting, servicing, and collecting loans and other forms of credit in the state and the manner in which any such business is conducted, and this regulation shall be in lieu of all other regulation of such activities by any municipal corporation or other political subdivision. Any ordinance, resolution, regulation, or other action by a municipal corporation or political subdivision to regulate, directly or indirectly, the origination, granting, servicing, or collection of loans or other forms of credit constitutes a conflict with the Revised Code, including, but not limited to, Titles XI, XIII, XVII, and XLVII, and with the uniform operation throughout the state of lending and other credit provisions, and is preempted.
Ohio Rev.Code § 1.63(A)-(B). Defendants maintain that the City’s lawsuit is an “action by a municipal corporation [¶]... ] to regulate, directly or indirectly, the origination, granting, servicing, or collecting of loans or other forms of credit,” and thus conflicts with the Ohio Revised Code, re- *518 suiting in its preemption. The City responds by arguing that its public nuisance action is not a regulatory action, but simply an ordinary action to recover money or property, and therefore does not fall within the purview of § 1.63. 4 The Court agrees with Defendants.
The statute expressly covers “[a]ny ordinance, resolution, regulation, or
other action,”
and thus preempts more than just traditional legislative and administrative efforts. Ohio Rev.Code § 1.63 (emphasis added). Without question, common law actions for damages represent an important manner of regulating conduct.
Riegel v. Medtronic, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
The United States Supreme Court has recognized that the judicial process can be viewed as the extension of a government’s regulatory power. As the court explained, “[sjtate power may be exercised as much by a jury’s application of a state rule of law in a civil suit,” as by regulation or ordinance.
City of Philadelphia v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp.,
The City’s citations to a definition contained in another (wholly irrelevant) section of the Ohio Revised Code (§ 4905.65), which by its own terms applies only to “local regulation,” does not inform the Court’s judgment, as that definition ignores the broad language employed in the *519 statutory text and describes only a small subset of the types of conduct subject to § 1.63. Nor does the City’s suggestion that its lawsuit does not qualify as regulation because it does not establish “a detailed, comprehensive, independent code of lender conduct” hold any merit. That the City attempts to paint with a broad brush, attacking all subprime lending within its borders, rather than challenging specific practices or transactions, does nothing to lessen the regulatory nature of its complaint. Regulation can be general or specific, and as Defendants correctly point out, a general enactment barring subprime lending would be no less regulatory than a detailed, comprehensive scheme. Under the circumstances presented, the Court finds that the City’s public nuisance action is a regulatory action by a municipal corporation.
Having concluded that the City’s complaint constitutes a form of municipal regulatory “action” within the meaning of § 1.63, little doubt remains that the SAC seeks to “regulate, directly or indirectly, the origination, granting, servicing, or collection of loans or other forms of eredit[.]” Through its complaint, the City seeks a judicial determination that the alleged sub-prime mortgage lending and securitization that took place in Cleveland constitutes a public nuisance under Ohio common law. (SAC ¶¶ 4, 8, 21.) Such a finding would label as illegal a broad array of lending practices, including much of the mortgage lending that prevailed in the Cleveland market, which is home to many low income borrowers who did not qualify for prime mortgages. As a result, the SAC represents, at the very least, an indirect attempt to regulate the origination and granting of mortgage loans. It is therefore preempted by Ohio Revised Code § 1.63.
The City cannot avoid preemption simply by claiming it is acting as a private litigant exercising its proprietary powers, rather than performing its governmental function. The statute at issue makes no distinction between actions that regulate in a “governmental” capacity versus a “proprietary” capacity. It simply applies to “action” that “regulate[s]” the specified activities. Ohio Rev.Code § 1.63. As other courts have recognized, “the judicial process can be viewed as the extension of a government’s regulatory power.”
City of Philadelphia,
Furthermore, even if the statute acknowledged such a distinction, the very nature of the City’s claim — which seeks relief for an alleged
public
nuisance — betrays any contention that its lawsuit is aimed at vindicating the City’s private interests rather than “protecting its citizens or pursuing some other civic agenda.” (PL’s Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss
6
at 28.) Public nuisance is defined as “an unreasonable interference with a right common to the general public.”
Brown v. Scioto County Bd. of Comm’rs,
By asserting a claim for public nuisance, the City by definition seeks to advance its governmental interest in protecting its citizens, rather than some purely private agenda (which it could not, in any event, use a public nuisance claim to pursue). 7 The allegations levied in support of its claim, along with the arguments it raises in opposition to dismissal, confirm the purpose of the City’s suit as a means of protecting the public interest. 8 As such it is a regulatory action by a municipal corporation that Ohio Revised Code § 1.63 preempts.
Finally, Defendants’ state law preemption argument rests on express statutory grounds and does not implicate the Ohio Constitution. Thus, the City’s insistence that its lawsuit does not violate the Home Rule Amendment is of no moment.
For the reasons explained supra, the City’s public nuisance lawsuit falls within the ambit of the preemption provision of Ohio Revised Code § 1.63, and is therefore subject to dismissal. Even if not preempted by state law, however, the City’s claim fails as a matter of law on several other grounds. The Court turns to the substance of the public nuisance claim to address these additional bases for dismissal.
D. Public Nuisance
Ohio law defines nuisance as “a distinct civil wrong, consisting of anything wrongfully done or permitted which interferes with or annoys another in the enjoyment of his legal rights.”
Taylor v. City of Cincinnati,
Public nuisance divides further into two subcategories — absolute nuisance and qualified nuisance.
Hurier v. Ohio Dep’t of Transp.,
No. 01AP-1362,
Thus, to state a viable claim for qualified public nuisance, Plaintiff must allege facts sufficient to demonstrate that Defendants owed Plaintiff a duty, Defendants breached that duty, and Defendants’ breach proximately caused Plaintiffs injury.
Rahman v. Ohio Dep’t of Transp.,
No. 05AP-436,
1. The Economic Loss Doctrine Bars The City’s Claim
Defendants argue that the City’s claim is completely barred by the economic loss doctrine which, as a general matter, precludes recovery in tort for purely economic losses not arising from tangible physical harm to persons or property.
See Queen City Terminals, Inc. v. Gen. Am. Transp. Corp.,
Defendants argue that the economic loss rule applies in qualified public nuisance actions like this one, and bars the City from its desired recovery. In support of this argument, Defendants cite two eases:
Ashtabula River Corp. Group II v. Conrail Inc.,
Looking to avoid the fatal effect of the economic loss doctrine, the City makes several arguments, none of which has merit. First, the City baldly asserts that Ohio courts “do[ ] not enforce the economic loss rule in public nuisance cases.” (PL’s Opp’n at 34-35.) This statement is at best misleading, as the City provides absolutely no direct support for it. The Ashtabula River and RWP decisions are the only Ohio cases discussing the application of the economic loss doctrine to public nuisance claims, and both concluded that the rule applies. Thus, the City’s contention that Ohio courts do not apply the economic loss doctrine in public nuisance cases is palpably false, and its direct converse is true. The City’s real argument is that both Ashtabula River and RWP were wrongly decided and can and should be ignored.
The City supports this position by (1) citing two law review articles suggesting that the economic loss doctrine should not apply in public nuisance actions; (2) arguing that the courts in
Ashtabula River
and
RWP
erred by failing to follow the Restatement (Second) of Torts on the issue; and (3) claiming that the Ohio Supreme Court implicitly acknowledged the inapplicability of the economic loss doctrine in
City of Cincinnati v. Beretta USA Corp.,
Without citing any Ohio cases, the City instead refers to two law review articles, Denise E. Antolini, Modernizing Public Nuisance: Solving the Paradox of the Special Injury Rule, 28 Ecology L.Q. 755, 824 (2001), and David Kairys, The Governmental Handgun Cases and the Elements and Underlying Policies of Public Nuisance Law, 32 Conn. L.Rev. 1175, 1186 (2000), both of which suggest that public nuisance claims are excepted from the economic loss rule. 9 As Defendants point out, *523 these articles predate the Ashtabula River and RWP decisions and make no attempt to address the specifics of Ohio law. The articles therefore hold correspondingly little persuasive value in terms of describing Ohio law as it exists today. This is particularly so in light of the Ohio Supreme Court’s recent reiteration of its commitment to the economic loss doctrine. In 2005, it observed that:
The economic-loss rule generally prevents recovery in tort of damages for purely economic loss. The well-established general rule is that a plaintiff who has suffered only economic loss due to another’s negligence has not been injured in a manner which is legally cognizable or compensable. This rule stems from the recognition of a balance between tort law, designed to redress losses suffered by breach of a duty imposed by law to protect societal interests, and contract law, which holds that parties to a commercial transaction should remain free to govern their own affairs. Tort law is not designed to compensate parties for losses suffered as a result of a breach of duties assumed only by agreement. That type of compensation necessitates an analysis of the damages which were within the contemplation of the parties when framing their agreement. It remains the particular province of the law of contracts.
Corporex,
The City further contends that the courts in
Ashtabula River
and
RWP
erroneously failed to rely upon two illustrations set forth in a comment to the Restatement (Second) of Torts.
See
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 821C cmt. h (1979). This argument is without merit. The City’s assertion that “Ohio courts rely heavily on [the Restatement] in delineating the contours of public nuisance law” is, at least with respect to the illustrations it cites, a serious exaggeration. A search of Ohio cases discloses exactly one published decision that makes any reference to Section 821C of the Restatement.
10
See Brown,
Likewise, the Court is not persuaded by the City’s argument that the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in
City of Cincinnati
supports a finding that the economic loss doctrine does not apply in public nuisance cases. The court in
City of Cincinnati
did not confront the economic loss doctrine in its discussion of the public nuisance claim. It simply was not addressed.
11
While the City suggests that this fact is sufficient to indicate that the Ohio Supreme Court would not apply the economic loss doctrine if actually confronted with the issue, the Court disagrees. Viewed most charitably to the City’s position, the Ohio Supreme Court’s silence on the issue at best gives rise to a weak implication that it would not apply the economic loss doctrine in public nuisance actions. That implication might hold some persuasive value in the absence of any reliable indicators of how Ohio courts would decide this issue and if courts in other jurisdictions supported that view. But this is not an issue of first impression. Two previous Ohio cases (both decided after
City of Cincinnati)
placed the question of whether the economic loss doctrine applies in public nuisance cases squarely at issue, and both times, following thorough discussions of the applicable law, the courts answered in the affirmative.
Ashtabula River,
For these reasons, while the Court concurs with the City’s assessment that Ash *525 tabula River and RWP are not binding precedents, the Court finds the City’s case for ignoring them completely unpersuasive. Accordingly, the Court rejects the City’s suggestion that the cases were wrongly decided and do not accurately set forth the law of Ohio, but instead finds Ashtabula River and RWP compelling and agrees with Defendants that the economic loss doctrine prevents recovery of purely economic losses in a public nuisance action.
Finally, the City suggests that even if the economic loss rule applies to public nuisance suits, its complaint does not contravene the rule because the damages it seeks to recover are not exclusively economic, but are (at least partially) related to property damage. Specifically, the City alleges that Defendants’ conduct caused physical degradation of the foreclosed homes, turning them into “eyesores,” and “fire hazards,” leading the City to incur “maintenance and demolition costs, together with increased fire and safety expenditures, while losing tax revenues on account of the diminished value of both the foreclosed residences and its [sic] neighbors.” (Pl.’s Opp’n, at 38.)
In the SAC, the City asserts two general categories of damages, one consisting of the diminished property tax receipts owing to the foreclosure crisis, the other its costs in maintaining and demolishing the blighted post-foreclosure properties. As to the former category, there can be little dispute that these damages are purely economic in nature.
See Pavlovich v. Nat’l City Bank,
As explained previously, the economic loss rule precludes tort recovery for economic losses not arising from tangible physical harm to persons or property.
Corporex,
2. The City’s Allegations Do Not Establish Unreasonable Interference With A Public Right
Notoriously vague and ill-defined, public nuisance claims have been used to impose liability for a broad panoply of conduct.
See
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 821B cmt. a (1979) (examples include double parking; hitting golf balls into highways; keeping diseased animals; practicing medicine without a license; handling a snake at a religious ceremony; conducting a bullfight; using fireworks in the street; operating a noisy, rowdy dance hall; and playing baseball on Sundays). The nebulous and malleable nature of the claim notwithstanding, Ohio courts have long imposed the following concrete limitation on public nuisance claims: “What the law sanctions cannot be held to be a public nuisance.”
Allen Freight,
This is but another way of saying that although it would be a nuisance at common law, conduct which is fully authorized by statute or administrative regulation is not an actionable tort. This is especially true where a comprehensive set of legislative acts or administrative regulations governing the details of a particular kind of conduct exist.
Brown,
Here, Defendants claim that their conduct cannot constitute a public nuisance because the subprime lending that underlies the City’s claim was permitted, and even encouraged, by government regulation. According to Defendants, if sub-prime lending was sanctioned by law — and the City does not contend otherwise — then it cannot constitute a public nuisance under Ohio law. Therefore, the City’s allegations against Defendants — accusing them of providing funding for subprime loans— cannot possibly be classified as a public nuisance.
The City responds by arguing that otherwise lawful conduct can still constitute a public nuisance if performed negligently. The City also contends that the regulations Defendants rely upon were inadequate and “reflect[ ] a total vacuum of effective oversight.” (Pl.’s Opp’n at 19.) Furthermore, the City maintains, the regulations cited by Defendants pertain to lending, while the City challenges their mortgage securitization activities.
As to the first point of contention, this presents a purely legal question — does Ohio law allow otherwise legally-sanctioned conduct that is negligently performed to be classed as a public nuisance? The City says yes, Defendants say no. Defendants have the better argument. The City’s position fails to frame the issue properly because it ignores the difference between conduct that is merely “lawful,” as in “not legally prohibited,” and conduct that is subject to regulation and, within the framework of a regulatory scheme, encouraged. Some illustrations are instructive.
*527
It is, without question, perfectly lawful to own a trash receptacle and place it on one’s property. As a general matter, no set of comprehensive state or federal statutes or regulations governs the placement of trash receptacles on property. Thus, such conduct is generally lawful, but not regulated. In a public nuisance action based upon such conduct, the plaintiff must plead and prove negligence. For instance, in
Williams v. 312 Walnut Ltd. P’ship,
No. C-960368,
The analysis differs where the conduct allegedly constituting a public nuisance is subject to regulation. Where a regulatory scheme governs the conduct of certain activity, courts assess whether the defendant complied with the regulatory scheme to determine whether a duty was breached, i.e., whether the defendant unreasonably interfered with a public right. Under such circumstances, if the defendant complies with that scheme, he cannot be sued for public nuisance by a plaintiff claiming that, despite compliance with the regulatory system, the activity was nevertheless performed in a negligent manner.
12
In
Hager,
for'instance, the plaintiffs owned property adjacent to land on which the defendant built and operated a hazardous waste storage and treatment facility.
Because Defendants claim immunity from a public nuisance action based upon compliance with an applicable regulatory structure, this case is akin to
Hager,
*528
and Defendants’ view of the law is the correct one. Under a long line of decisions, a showing that the challenged conduct is subject to regulation and was performed in conformance therewith insulates such conduct from suit as a public nuisance.
Allen Freight,
This distinction between conduct that is subject to regulation, and conduct that is merely lawful, also highlights a fundamental difference between the instant case and
City of Cincinnati,
on which the City relies heavily for support. In that case, the plaintiff alleged that the defendant gun manufacturers marketed, distributed, and sold firearms in a manner that facilitated widespread accessibility of weapons to prohibited users, including children and criminals.
City of Cincinnati,
Thus, if the challenged conduct is subject to regulation and the defendant complied with the regulatory structure, that conduct is not actionable under Ohio law as a public nuisance. Defendants assert that subprime lending was so regulated, and the City does not challenge Defendants’ compliance with those regulations. Accordingly, Defendants argue, they cannot be held liable for public nuisance. The Court agrees.
Mortgage lending in general is subject to a vast regulatory regime. At the federal level, mortgage lenders are subject to a wide variety of statutes, including the Truth in Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq., the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq., the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, 12 U.S.C. § 2801 et seq., the Alternative Mortgage Transaction Parity Act, 12 U.S.C. § 3 801, et seq., the Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. § 3601 et seq., and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1691 et seq. The State of Ohio also has numerous laws that apply to mortgage lending, including *529 the Land Installment Contract Act, Ohio Rev.Code § 5313.01 et seq., the Ohio Mortgage Loan Act, Ohio Rev.Code § 1321.51 et seq., and the Ohio Homeowners Equity Protection Act, Ohio Rev.Code § 1349.25 et seq.
Of particular relevance to this proceeding, in addition to the statutes noted
supra,
the federal government has enacted numerous laws and issued significant regulatory guidance specifically aimed at encouraging lending to traditionally under-served segments of the population. For instance, Congress enacted the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, 12 U.S.C. § 2901
et seq.,
which requires federal agencies “to assess an institution’s record of meeting the credit needs of the entire community, including low and moderate income neighborhoods, [¶]... ] and simultaneously to encourage the institution to do so.”
Nat’l State Bank, Elizabeth, N.J. v. Long,
In addition, Congress created the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”) in 1970, and later wrote its purposes into law as part of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”). 12 U.S.C. § 1451
et seq.
FIRREA was later amended by the Federal Housing Enterprises Financial Safety and Soundness Act of 1992, and those amendments expressed that “[t]he congressional purposes for Freddie Mac are clearly designed to serve the public interest by increasing the availability of mortgages on housing for low- and moderate-income families and by promoting nationwide access to mortgages.”
Am. Bankers Mortgage Corp. v. Fed. Home Loan Mortgage Corp.,
To achieve these objectives, the Department of Housing and Urban Development repeatedly urged the GSEs to increase their role in furthering subprime lending. In 2000, HUD declared that “[a]n expanded GSE presence in the subprime market could be of significant benefit to lower-income families, minorities, and families living in underserved areas.” HUD’s Regulation of the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac), 65 Fed.Reg. 65044, 65106 (Oct. 31, 2000). In a later statement, HUD expressed its view that this expansion in subprime lending was working to achieve the desired objective:
The growth in subprime lending over the last several years has benefited credit-impaired borrowers- — -those who may have blemishes in their credit records, insufficient credit history, or nontraditional credit sources. Subprime lenders have allowed these borrowers to access credit that they could not otherwise obtain in the prime credit market.
HUD’s Housing Goals for the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) for the Years 2005-2008 and Amendments to HUD’s Regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, 69 Fed.Reg. 63580, 63647 (Nov. 2, 2004).
*530
The picture that develops from an overview
14
of these laws and agency actions is not just one of significant regulation, but of express governmental encouragement of the type of lending that forms the basis for the City’s claim. In light of the vast regulatory machinery described
supra,
the City does not and cannot dispute the fact that subprime mortgage lending, which is absolutely fundamental to the allegations in the SAC, is subject to significant regulation. As such, it is, under Ohio law, conduct “the law sanctions.”
Mingo Junction,
The City tries to avoid this conclusion by insisting that the SAC attacks only the securitization activities of Defendants, while simultaneously disclaiming any challenge to the actual subprime lending that occurred in Cleveland. According to the City, securitization, unlike subprime lending, is not regulated, and therefore can constitute a public nuisance (and should be analyzed using general negligence principles). This argument defies logic and is not well-taken.
In the SAC, the City specifically alleges that subprime lending was inappropriate for Cleveland because its population was generally poor and underemployed, its economy was less than robust, and property values in the City were not rising as they were elsewhere. According to the City, these conditions “should have eliminated Cleveland as a market for widespread subprime lending.” (Compl. ¶ 59.) Thus, its complaint is that subprime loans should never have been given to borrowers in the City because it was all too foreseeable that these borrowers would ultimately default and the properties would be foreclosed, leaving the City to deal with the fallout. In essence, the City claims that as a whole, its residents were improper candidates for receiving subprime loans because those loans were too risky, and accuses Defendants of ignoring those risks and encouraging subprime lending within the City anyway by creating MBS that included mortgages on Cleveland properties. But even crediting the City’s allegation that securitization of subprime mortgages increased demand for such mortgages and created a “money seeking borrowers” phenomenon, the City does not contend (nor would it make any sense to contend) that the fact that subprime loans were packaged into securities and resold heightened the default risk of any particular underlying mortgage. The fundamental facts on which individual mortgage underwriting decisions were made and the factors affecting the borrower’s actual ability to repay (the borrower’s income, job stability, savings, etc.) did not vary based on the quantity of subprime loans that were issued. Thus, whether or not Defendants’ securitization activities were responsible for increasing the overall number of subprime loans, if the underlying lending activity was lawful, it is impossible to say that supporting that activity by supplying funds and creating MBS — at least one step removed from the actual lending — was itself unlawful. Stated the other way, the City’s public nuisance theory cannot succeed against Defendants unless the subprime lending Defendants allegedly facilitated also constituted a public nuisance.
*531
Yet the City does not claim that the underlying subprime mortgage lending was illegal, but instead concedes, as it must, that subprime lending was subject to extensive regulation. Nowhere in the SAC does the City allege that Defendants violated any of the myriad laws governing mortgage lending.
15
This is fatal to the City’s claim. There is no question that the subprime lending that occurred in Cleveland was conduct which “the law sanctions,” and as such, it cannot be a public nuisance.
Allen Freight,
The City also argues that even if the general rule exempts regulated conduct from public nuisance actions, that rule should be disregarded in this case because the regulations were ineffective and failed to prevent the calamitous foreclosure situation that befell Cleveland. But as the limiting principle in Mingo Junction recognizes, courts are not in the business of second-guessing the wisdom of legislative or regulatory decisions. Indeed, that is the very purpose of the rule — to keep courts out of the process where Congress or the General Assembly has already struck the regulatory balance. The City fails to provide any authority for the proposition that conduct that is subject to and complies with regulation can nevertheless be deemed a public nuisance based upon a judicial finding that the regulatory system was inadequate. Based upon long-established Ohio law, compliance with a regulatory scheme exempts the regulated conduct from constituting a public nuisance. This Court cannot and will not substitute its judgment for that of the regulators whose express responsibility it was to oversee mortgage lending, particularly where some of those same regulators were explicitly encouraging the very conduct of which the City complains. Thus, the City’s claim fails as a matter of law.
3. The City’s Allegations Are Not Sufficient To Demonstrate That Defendants’ Conduct Proximately Caused Its Alleged Damages
Defendants argue that the SAC is defective because the City’s allegations fail to satisfy the directness requirement set forth in
Holmes v. Secs. Investor Prot. Corp.,
The City raises several arguments in opposition to Defendants’ remoteness challenge. First, the City contends that Holmes is inapplicable since it involved RICO claims under federal statutory law, while this case arises under Ohio’s common law of public nuisance. Defendants argue that Holmes applies to any case in which proximate cause is one of the substantive elements or, at the very least, was incorporated into Ohio public nuisance law in City of Cincinnati.
As the Sixth Circuit has explained, “[bjecause the
Holmes
Court emphasized that the RICO statute incorporates general common law principles of proximate causation, remoteness principles are not limited to cases involving the RICO statute.”
Perry v. Am. Tobacco Co., Inc.,
Any further question as to applicability of
Holmes
to the instant case is answered by the Ohio Supreme Court’s opinion in
City of Cincinnati.
There, the Ohio Supreme Court applied
Holmes
to the claims asserted by Cincinnati against the various gun manufacturers, which included a cause of action under Ohio’s common law of public nuisance.
City of Cincinnati,
The City’s next argument against
Holmes
is that issues of proximate cause cannot be resolved on the pleadings. This too is incorrect, as the United States Supreme Court has expressly approved of applying
Holmes
in resolving a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
Anza v. Ideal Steel Supply Corp.,
Finding
Holmes
applicable, the discussion turns to the substance of the
Holmes
analysis which, at its core, requires “some direct relationship between the injury asserted and the injurious conduct alleged.”
Holmes,
In Holmes, the court explained why directness of relationship is a requirement of causation: (1) indirectness adds to the difficulty in determining which of the plaintiffs damages can be attributed to the defendant’s misconduct, (2) recognizing the claims of the indirectly injured would complicate the apportionment of damages among plaintiffs to avoid multiple recoveries, and (3) these complications are unwarranted given the availability of other parties who are directly injured and who can remedy the harm without these associated problems.
City of Cincinnati,
Application of Holmes dictates the conclusion that the City’s claim fails to sufficiently allege proximate cause. The City’s allegations fail to demonstrate any direct relationship between its alleged injury and Defendants’ conduct'. It would be tremendously difficult, if not completely impossible, to determine which of the City’s damages are attributable to Defendants’ alleged misconduct and not to some absent party. In addition, even if Defendants’ securitization activities were somehow unlawful, subprime borrowers and MBS investors stand in closer proximity to Defendants’ conduct and have potential claims and remedies available to vindicate their legal rights. Thus, the remoteness concerns articulated in Holmes reveal a lack of proximate cause, which mandates dismissal. A factual comparison illustrates.
In
Holmes,
the plaintiff Securities Investor Protection Corporation (“SIPC”) was a private non-profit corporation whose members included registered broker-deal
*534
ers.
Here, the City’s losses are similarly contingent upon the insolvency (or inability or unwillingness to repay) of non-parties— namely, the subprime borrowers whose homes were foreclosed and became fire hazards, eyesores, etc. Indeed, the City’s alleged losses in this case are significantly more attenuated than those claimed by the SIPC in Holmes. In that case, the challenged conduct was only one step removed from the plaintiffs damages. While Holmes was at best indirectly responsible for SIPC’s losses, he was the direct cause of the brokers’ insolvency, and the brokers’ insolvency directly triggered SIPC’s losses. By contrast, Defendants stand atop a lengthy chain of events, far removed from the City’s ultimate damages. Defendants allegedly provided funding for MBS, which created significant demand for subprime loans. Mortgage brokers (encouraged by government regulators) went out and found willing borrowers, and with the assistance of lenders, provided mortgages to the subprime borrowers. Defendants then bought up great quantities of these loans, packaged them together in various ways, and quickly resold the MBS to investors. Many of the subprime borrowers later failed to repay their loans. This occurred for any number of reasons. For example, the borrower may have lost a job, kept a job but did not have the wherewithal to repay in the first place, suffered a catastrophic injury, borrowed too much on credit cards, been unable to refinance the original loan, taken out a second mortgage that the borrower was unable to afford, suffered investment losses that depleted savings that were to be used to repay the mortgage, or, despite an ability to pay, simply decided to walk away from the mortgage because the expense was not justified by the property’s declining value — all of which the SAC conveniently ignores. Then someone — very importantly, not Defendants — foreclosed on the property. The property then failed to sell at the foreclosure auction and was taken back by the bank or abandoned. Regardless of who owned the property, it was not maintained — again, this could have occurred for any number of reasons. It eventually became an eyesore, a fire hazard, or otherwise deteriorated in condition to such a degree that the City was required to incur costs either maintaining the property or demolishing it. This confluence of events certainly was no small problem given the large volume of foreclosures in Cleveland and the city’s budgetary constraints, but under no circumstances can it be described as having been directly caused by Defendants’ conduct. As the foregoing discussion illustrates, the potential number of intervening causes borders on incalculable. Accordingly, this case is factually indistinguishable from *535 Holmes, directness is lacking, and the SAC must be dismissed.
Examination of the administrative rationales for the directness requirement reinforces this conclusion. As the foregoing factual discussion highlights, Defendants’ conduct was at most an indirect cause of the City’s claimed damages. As such, the SAC forcefully implicates Holmes’s concern with the difficulty of “ascertaining] the amount of a plaintiffs damages attributable to the violation, as distinct from other, independent factors[.]” The City even concedes the existence of several independent factors that could lead to foreclosures without regard to Defendants’ conduct, including “the City’s struggling, Rust-Belt economy, the fading prominence of the manufacturing sector, and Cleveland’s challenges in attracting a meaningful replacement.” (Compl. ¶ 55.) The City also acknowledges that the foreclosure crisis was precipitated by the broad decline in the housing market, which itself was the product of a myriad of factors occurring in unknown and unknowable proportions, many of which were completely beyond Defendants’ control. Sorting out these contributing factors in an effort to assign liability would be a speculation-laden, uncertain endeavor of the exact kind the
Holmes
analysis was designed to avoid.
See Anza,
The directness requirement also advances the notion that “directly injured victims can generally be counted on to vindicate the law as private attorneys general, without any of the problems attendant upon suits by plaintiffs injured more remotely[.]”
Holmes,
In addition, the damages alleged by the City are, as in
Holmes,
purely contingent on harm first visited upon absent third-parties.
Finally, any contention by the City that the remoteness analysis in City of Cincinnati supports a finding of proximate cause is without merit. In City of Cincinnati, the Ohio Supreme Court espoused the Holmes analysis consistent with the original pronouncement by the United States Supreme Court, and this Court has applied it here without deviation from that formulation. In addition, as described in detail supra, the factual allegations in this ease differ markedly and materially from those in City of Cincinnati, justifying a different result. As Defendants aptly note, the guns that comprised the illegal firearms market in City of Cincinnati originated with the defendant gun manufacturers, while in this case, Defendants did not originate the underlying subprime loans or initiate foreclosures in Cleveland, but merely provided funding for subprime lending. Thus, City of Cincinnati might be analogous only if the Ohio Supreme Court had concluded that the banks that provided financing to the gun industry could be held liable on a public nuisance theory. Its opinion does not so much as hint at such a broad expansion of public nuisance law.
This case also differs from
City of Cincinnati
because much of the harm alleged by Cincinnati occurred regardless of any injury to third-parties, while in this case, the City’s damages are purely derivative. Cincinnati’s damages were related to the existence of an illicit firearms market allegedly fostered by the gun manufacturers’ conduct, and included “costs for law enforcement, increased security, prison expenses and youth intervention services.”
City of Cincinnati,
Finding the allegations in the SAC insufficient to establish proximate causation, the City’s public nuisance claim fails as a matter of law.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ motions to dismiss are GRANTED. The City’s public nuisance claim fails as a matter of law because (1) it is preempted by Ohio Revised Code § 1.63; (2) it is barred by the economic loss rule; (3) the City’s allegations fail to demonstrate an unreasonable interference with a public right; and (4) the City’s allegations are insufficient to demonstrate that Defendants’ conduct was the proximate cause of its alleged damages. Accordingly, the SAC is DISMISSED with prejudice.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants filed a total of eight motions to dismiss:
Doc. No. 197 — Option One Mortgage Corp., Ameriquest Mortgage Securities, Inc., Countrywide Securities Corp., HSBC Securities (USA) Inc., Washington Mutual Bank, and Novastar Mortgage, Inc.
Doc. No. 199 — Greenwich Capital Markets, Inc., Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc., Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC, Credit Suisse (USA), Inc., Goldman Sachs & Co., and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.
Doc. No. 202 — Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. and Wells Fargo Asset Securities Corporation
Doc. No. 205 — Citibank, N.A. and Citigroup Global Markets, Inc.
Doc. No. 207 — JP Morgan Acquisition Corp., Bear Stearns & Co., Inc., and Chase Bank USA, N.A.
Doc. No. 208 — Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc.
Doc. No. 209 — Bank of America, N.A.
Doc. No. 228 — GMAC-RFC Holding Company
. For instance, the Wells Fargo defendants argue that the City’s claim is preempted by the National Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. § 21, et seq. (See Doc. Nos. 202 & 203.) Several defendants joined in this argument (see Doc. Nos. 205, 207, and 209), but it applies only to those defendants that are federally-chartered national banks.
. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (“OCC”) filed a motion for leave to appear as amicus cuñae in support of the Wells Fargo defendants. (Doc. No. 224.) In its memorandum, the OCC supports the National Bank Act preemption arguments raised by the Wells Fargo defendants. Because the Court does not address the federal preemption arguments, the OCC’s motion for leave is denied as moot.
. The City first argues that Ohio Rev.Code § 1.63 does not preempt its claim because "[cjourts may not presume that [a] statute was intended to abrogate the common law[,]" but instead, "[s]uch an intention must be expressly declared by the legislature or necessarily implied in the language of the statute."
LaCourse v. Fleitz,
. Thus, contrary to die City’s contention, it makes no difference that its suit only seeks to recover monetary damages.
. Hereinafter abbreviated as “PL's Opp’n.”
. The City's citation to
City of Vista v. Robert Thomas Secs., Inc.,
. If that is not its purpose, and the City is not suing to redress an interference with a right common to the general public, then the SAC clearly fails to state a public nuisance claim as a matter of law.
See Brown,
. The Kairys article devotes a single sentence to the economic loss issue, stating that the "economic loss doctrine [...] could not be applied to public nuisance claims without overruling at least two centuries of public nuisance law.” Kairys,
supra,
at 1185. But while the author casts this statement of law in confident, seemingly incontrovertible language, it is supported with a single citation to a federal district court opinion,
In re One Meridian Plaza Fire Litig.,
. There are two unpublished decisions as well, but they simply cite the published decision and note its reliance upon Section 821C.
See Hager v. Waste Techs. Indus.,
No. 2000-CO-45,
. The City argues that because the court affirmed dismissal of Cincinnati's statutory product liability claims under the Ohio Products Liability Act ("OPLA”) on grounds that the plaintiff failed to allege “harm” within the meaning of Ohio Rev.Code § 2307.79, the court implicitly held that the economic loss rule did not apply to the public nuisance claim, or else it would have dismissed the claim on that basis. To recover under the OPLA, the plaintiff must allege "harm,” which is defined as "death, physical injury to person, serious emotional distress, or physical damage to property other than the product in question. Economic loss is not 'harm.' ” Ohio Rev.Code § 2307.71(G). This definition sounds a lot like the economic loss rule, but the fact that the court in
City of Cincinnati
affirmed dismissal of the statutory claims based upon the plaintiff's failure to satisfy the terms of the statute is not the same as saying it dismissed the claims based upon the economic loss rule. The OPLA is a statutory scheme enacted by the Ohio General Assembly which governs strict product liability claims in Ohio.
E.g., Botnick v. Zimmer, Inc.,
. But just because the actor failed to comply with the regulatory scheme does not mean he is liable per se, because violation of a statute imposed for public safety will not preclude assertion of defenses and excuses-or in other words, will not result in strict liability — unless the statute clearly contemplates such a result.
Sikora v. Wenzel,
. Obviously, this conclusion is strictly limited to qualified public nuisance actions under Ohio common law. The Court has not considered, and expresses no opinion about, the effect compliance with a set of applicable regulations would have on any other type of claim. Moreover, as noted in
Crawford v. Nat’l Lead Co.,
. The foregoing is by no means intended to provide an exhaustive view of the applicable regulatory universe. For purposes of the issues before the Court, reference to the state and federal laws cited herein is, in the Court's view, more than sufficient to establish that subprime lending was and is subject to significant regulation. Further discussion of the regulatory framework would be superfluous.
. This is, of course, a general statement, but it must be so general precisely because the City is challenging securitization activity generally, not the legality of any specific MBS or of the loan given to any specific borrower. Without question, it is possible that certain individual lenders engaged in specific transactions that did not comply with applicable regulations, but that possibility is not presented by the SAC and has no impact on the issues before the Court.
